editorial@usdf.org american dressage legends: chuck grant · 2020. 8. 13. · editorial@usdf.org 20...
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editorial@usdf.org
20 April 2014 • USDF ConneCtion
historical connection
e. G. Charles “Chuck” Grant (1914-1990) was the second person in-ducted into the Roemer Founda-
tion/USDF Hall of Fame. Grant received the honor posthumously in 1997, in rec-ognition of his contributions to Ameri-
can dressage as a trainer, an instructor, an author (American Dressage, Ameri-can Dressage II, and Haute École), and an inspiration to many.
Growing up on a farm in the Up-per Peninsula of Michigan, Grant spent many hours riding the farm
horses bareback. After high school, at the age of nineteen, he signed up to pursue a college degree in maritime engineering.
Tat summer, in 1934, Grant dis-covered the 122nd Field Artillery and soon changed his course to join the national Guard unit, where he could ride horses every day. A fellow service-man gave him James Fillis’s nineteenth-century training classic, Breaking and Riding; and Grant became interested in training horses, reading every book on the subject he could fnd.
US Army Colonels isaac Leon-ard Kitts and Hiram tuttle were two of Grant’s equestrian role models. He would watch them ride and emulate them as best he could, as he wasn’t al-lowed to approach senior ofcers to ask them questions.
After World War ii, Grant went to work for a riding academy in Chicago, eventually purchasing his own equestri-an training facility, Plush Horse Stables, also in Chicago. He befriended two of his boarders: Paul Stjernholm, a Dane who’d been a major in the US Cavalry; and Arthur Konyot, head of the famed european circus family. Both men helped further Grant’s equestrian edu-cation. Grant’s frst wife, emmy temple, a rider from ohio, soon joined the three men in their discussions, forming an in-formal dressage group. in 1947, emmy temple taught the frst civilian dressage lessons in the Midwest at Plush Horse Stables. Later that same year, Grant judged the frst dressage show in the Midwest, in Morton Grove, iL.
From 1969 to 1979, Grant led a dressage and haute école exhibition troupe called the Horse Capades, which featured some of his advanced students and also included a comedy routine or two.
in 1978, with second wife Carole Grant (herself a top rider and compet-itor, including two gold medals at the 1983 Pan American Games), Grant es-tablished Shine a Bit Farm in Brigh-ton, Mi. Tere he trained 17 horses to Grand Prix, including Shining Gold, Bit o Shine, Shine a Bit, Miss Prince, Prussian Dudley, and tarnished Gold. Grant trained Appaloosas, Arabians, Saddlebreds, and Toroughbreds and taught hundreds of students, includ-ing such well-known dressage riders as Dominique Barbier, Violet Hop-kins, Mary Anne McPhail, and nancy Polozker. Grant’s daughters, Mary-Ann Grant and tonya Grant Barber, are also successful Fei-level trainers and competitors.
Te largely self-taught Grant be-lieved that one cannot teach a horse something he does not already know; instead, the key is to learn how to communicate and to ask correctly. Many who have read Grant’s books or who were fortunate enough to have studied or conversed with this mod-ern-day master recall the key point of his teachings: “Ask frequently; expect little or nothing; reward generously.”
in addition to his books, Grant penned numerous articles on dres-sage. Read on for his essay on how to introduce fying changes, frst pub-lished in the July 1981 issue of Dres-sage & CT magazine and excerpted from the second edition of his book American Dressage.
Approaching the Flying Changes of Lead
By Chuck Grant
in introducing the fying changes of lead to the horse there are a number of prerequisites. Te horse must be able to work at all paces in the canter, that is collected, ordinary, and extend-ed. He must be able to make circles without getting of balance and lean-ing on the rider’s hand. He must be
American Dressage Legends:Chuck GrantMeet the the man dubbed the “dean of American dressage riders”
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From Dressage & CT, July 1981. Reprinted by permission of tonya Grant Barber and the Grant family.
ClassiCally CoRRECt: Grant in an
undated photo
Check out our
April 2 podcast
about Chuck Grant
at usdf.podbean.com.
PODCAST
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USDF ConneCtion • April 2014 21
able to do simple changes of lead—in-
cluding canter departs on each lead
on the circle. Te counter-canter on
the straight line and circle must be
correct and the half-pass at the can-
ter balanced. When all of this is ac-
complished with the horse remain-
ing straight, forward, and calm, you
are ready to begin training the fying
changes of lead.
i start the fying changes from the
left lead to the right. once this is done
i then work on the changes from right
to left lead. However, the changes can
be taught starting from right to left. in
either case, do not go ahead with the
other direction until the horse accepts
the aids for the initial changes—it will
only take less time and be less confus-
ing to the horse if you confrm one di-
rection at a time. Also do not attempt
sequel changes of lead until the chang-
es, in both directions, are confrmed.
Again, to rush ahead will only confuse
and perhaps excite the horse—and this
must be avoided, for the horse learns
nothing when confused or excited.
it is important for you to under-
stand the mechanics of the canter gait JEN
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FiNisHED PRoDUCt: Olivia LaGoy-Weltz
rides a right-to-left fying change aboard
Rassing’s Lonoir at the 2014 Succeed/USDF
FEI-Level Trainers’ Conference
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editorial@usdf.org
22 April 2014 • USDF ConneCtion
historical connection
before starting the fying changes. Te frst beat of the canter on the left leg is when the horse strikes of on the right hind leg. He then lands on the right fore and left hind—which is the sec-ond beat of the canter. Ten he rolls forward over the left fore leg, which is the third beat. Te second beat of the canter is when you ask for the fying change of lead. Precisely as the right fore and left hind are on the ground, you are going to slide your left leg well back along his side. At the same time
you are going to fex the horse ever so slightly toward the new leading leg, in this case the right. As you slide your left leg back, your weight automatical-ly goes slightly to the right—or think of the right hip going a little forward as your left hip goes back. You must be prompt in asking for the change of lead, for the horse has to make the change during the period of suspension, when all four feet are of the ground. Tis is not easy to do. if it were, more people would be able to teach their horses to
do the fying changes. You, the train-er, must give this a lot of thought, for the timing and degree of movement on your part are very important.
now, for your frst fying change of lead. Assuming you are canter-ing your horse along the left lead, the change will be from left to right. Te whip, which is about 39" long, will be in your left hand. Te whip is used only to reinforce the leg aid and will be used, if needed, right behind your left leg just as the leg has started its swing to the rear. i recommend you do the frst change on the straight line from counter lead—in this case the left—to the true lead. Also the change should not be made in the corner but while on the straight line. Making the change in the corner seems to set the horse up for the change to be late be-hind. When the horse is on the second beat of the canter, when the right fore and left hind touch the ground, you will give the signal for the change.
Te responses which may follow are variable. First, after applying the aids, the horse could respond with a good clean change of lead. if this occurs you must immediately reward and come to the walk, letting him bask in his (and your) accomplishment! Another re-sponse is if the horse changes leads frst in front, later behind. Tis is called a late change of lead. on some horses it is difcult to feel the late changes. i rec-ommend every rider teaching the fy-ing changes of lead to have an experi-enced person on the ground to tell you what the horse did. if this is impossible, then the early morning or late afternoon shadows are helpful. Te fying chang-es of lead are difcult to do without a groundsman, but it has been done. Re-member, after the correction, be sure to reward your horse—and analyze what has happened.
if the change was late, quietly pick up the left lead and again ask for the fying change. Do this until you get a change that is not late—meaning, not necessarily a “perfect change”—but a change which demonstrates the horse is trying to please. Perhaps the change will then be behind frst and
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USDF ConneCtion • April 2014 23
later in front—for which i would re-
ward. Te horse that is late in front, i
have found, straightens out on its own
in time. Perhaps the horse will be “un-
clean”—or reaching not as far behind
in the change as he does in front. i
would reward him for this as he clear-
ly is showing an efort to please.
Remember, you should not punish
the horse when teaching the chang-
es of lead; this must be a pleasant ex-
perience for him. Also, usually the
mistakes made are due to the rider,
not the horse—or if you have a friend
watching changes, remember friends
can make mistakes also! if you are in
doubt about the correctness of the
change, it would be better to reward
the horse. Again, it is better to ques-
tion yourself than the horse. You make
many more mistakes than he does!
A good time to ask for the frst
change of lead is at the end of the train-
ing session. After the change is com-
pleted, the best reward for the horse is
to put him back in his stable. Perhaps
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editorial@usdf.org
24 April 2014 • USDF ConneCtion
historical connection
the next day you may ask him for two
changes. in any event, you will have to
play this by ear, for the horse is your si-
lent partner in this game of learning. He
is the one that will tell you if he should
be asked for another change of lead on
any certain day, or if you should wait for
a more opportune time when the horse
is calm and relaxed. Te horse cannot
learn when he is not relaxed; you must
wait for calmness to prevail.
Let’s suppose you have asked for
the change and get no response from
the horse. in that case, just keep can-
tering along on the left lead and ask
again. You may use the whip light-
ly behind your left leg to reinforce
the leg aid. Ask often, expect little or
nothing, and reward generously. Soon-
er or later you will get the change of
lead. Bear in mind that you are asking
the horse to do something he has not
done before from a signal which per-
haps you have never given before. You
have, however, given this same cue or
combination of aids for canter departs
from the walk or trot—applying this
while traveling about 8 mph is yet an-
other situation—for the both of you!
Tere are many more responses the
horse can give for the fying change of
lead. Suppose the horse kicks out with
the left hind leg when you asked for the
change. You did not want this response,
so you should not reward—but nei-
ther should you punish for this. At this
time in training i would choose to ig-
nore the kicking. Another response to
the change is that he might go past the
hand, he may go crooked, or he may
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USDF ConneCtion • April 2014 25
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buck up behind. Above all you must re-
main calm. All we can do is hope the
horse remains calm. if he becomes ap-
prehensive or excited we must remem-
ber that he learns nothing when in this
state. We then must wait until the horse
relaxes, and only then can we again ask
for the fying change. Some horses con-
tinue to resist the fying change by using
a number of defenses. You, the train-
er, must remain persistent, yet never
demanding, but continually asking for
the fying changes. Tis may take days
to do. one day the horse will make the
change. When this occurs, be prompt
with your reward.
You, the trainer, if you have never
done fying changes before could prac-
tice applying the aids on any horse. Just
canter along and ask for the change of
lead using the same aids. Tis will de-
velop your timing and agility in the use
of the aids. Also, in the early stages of
working on fying changes it is better
not to ask for the change in the same
place more than perhaps three times.
Later you can try the change from true
lead to counter—but not in the begin-
ning on a circle or in the corners of the
arena. Te changes on a circle from
the true to false are not done until the
horse and rider are confrmed.
Do not set a limit on teaching the
fying changes of lead, or any other
training you are to do. only the horse
can tell you when it is time to go on
to the next step in training. once you
have the single changes from left to
right correct about 90 percent of the
time, you are ready to begin teaching
the right-to-left changes of lead. Tis
must be done in the same organized
manner in which you approached the
left-to-right changes.
Remember, nothing is gained by
hurrying through any portion of your
training or neglecting small mistakes.
in all training you must remember to
ask often, expect nothing, and reward
generously. s
For more information about the Ro-
emer Foundation/USDF Hall of Fame
or to submit a nomination, visit usdf.
org/hallofame.
Pages A2-.indd 25 3/10/2014 11:56:06 AM
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